Bookmarks 2025-05-10T16:59:58.547Z
by Owen Kibel
31 min read
61 New Bookmarks
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Allegretto amabile - YouTube Music May 10, 2025 Allegretto amabile - YouTube Music YouTube Music Provided to YouTube by Naxos Digital Services Allegretto amabile ¡ Lajos LencsÊs ¡ Gaby Pas-van Riet ¡ Sudwestdeutsches Kammerorchester Pforzheim ¡ Vladisla... |
| | Pachelbel's Canon in D â Emotional Violin Cover by ViOLiNiA Zhanna Stelmakh - YouTube Music
May 10, 2025
Pachelbel's Canon in D â Emotional Violin Cover by ViOLiNiA Zhanna Stelmakh - YouTube Music
YouTube Music
njoy the timeless beauty of Pachelbel's Canon in D, reimagined in this emotional violin cover. Composed by Johann Pachelbel in the late 17th century, this pi... |
| | Allegretto - YouTube Music
May 10, 2025
Allegretto - YouTube Music
YouTube Music
Provided to YouTube by Naxos Digital Services Allegretto ¡ Luigi Magistrelli ¡ Italian Classical Consort ¡ Giovanni Paisiello Kammermusik fĂźr Bläser â 200... |
| | 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 1 in C Major - YouTube Music
May 10, 2025
24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 1 in C Major - YouTube Music
YouTube Music
Provided to YouTube by Warner Classics 24 Preludes, Op. 28: No. 1 in C Major ¡ Dong Hyek Lim Bach: Goldberg Variations, BWV 988 - Chopin: Preludes, Op. 28 ... |
| | J.S. Bach: 4 Duets, BWV 802/805: 1. Duetto I in E Minor, BWV 802 - YouTube Music
May 10, 2025
J.S. Bach: 4 Duets, BWV 802/805: 1. Duetto I in E Minor, BWV 802 - YouTube Music
YouTube Music
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music Group J.S. Bach: 4 Duets, BWV 802/805: 1. Duetto I in E Minor, BWV 802 ¡ Ramin Bahrami "4 Duets, BWV 802/805" and ot... |
| | Rare genetic mutation lets some people thrive on just 4 hours of shut-eye | Live Science
May 10, 2025
Rare genetic mutation lets some people thrive on just 4 hours of shut-eye
Live Science
A newly identified mutation helps super-sleepers get by on just four to six hours of shut-eye per night, while the rest of us need around eight hours. Researchers described the SIK3-N783Y mutation in a new study after testing it on sleep-deprived inbred mice. |
| | Scientists Discover Genetic Mutation Linked to Needing Less Sleep : ScienceAlert
May 10, 2025
Scientists Discover Genetic Mutation Linked to Needing Less Sleep
ScienceAlert
The answer to the question 'how much sleep do I need each night?' depends on a variety of factors, and we just found a new one: a rare mutation in the SIK3 gene that seems to enable the brain to function on less sleep than normal. |
| | Young chemist transformed an ancient plant into effective therapy - Earth.com
May 10, 2025
The young chemist who transformed an ancient plant into an effective therapy
Earth.com
American chemist Alice Ball revolutionized leprosy treatment by making chaulmoogra oil injectable, decades before antibiotics. |
| | Ancient Chinese Tomb Reveals Stunning Murals with Blonde Man
May 10, 2025
Archaeologists Found Someone They Never Expected in an Ancient Chinese Tomb: a Blonde Man
Popular Mechanics
The discovery reveals an unexpected connection to the ancient Silk Road.
A 2018 reconstruction project of a hillside road in the capital of the Shanxi Province led to unearthing the tomb, but archaeologists hadnât really reported on the discovery until recently.Long Zhen, director of the Jinyang Ancient City Research Institute of the Taiyuan Cultural Relics Protection Research Institute, says, according to a translation from the state-run news outlet Xinhua, that the tomb has pairs of figures painted on both sides of the tomb door and that paintings of people continue throughout the tomb, including everything from women pushing stones to grind flour to men making pasta, women using oranges to fetch water, and men stepping on hammers to help pound rice. Experts believe the tomb was owned by a man who died in 736 AD at age 63, during the middle of the Tang dynasty, which ran from 618 to 907 AD. He was buried in the tomb along with his wife. The eight scenes painted on the tomb are in the âfigures under the treeâ style, trendy at the time, whichânot unlike the name suggestsâshows daily activities occurring under artistically rendered trees. The scenes offer a fresh view on what daily life and responsibilities were during the Tang dynasty. The figures painted on the tomb all appeared to be of the Han ethnicityâexcept for one: a figure painted with blond hair and a beard.Victor Xiong, professor of history at Western Michigan University, who wasnât involved in the discovery, told Live Science the âWesterner,â painted in the tomb leading camels, likely represented someone from Central Asia. âBased on his facial features and outfit style,â Xiong said, âwe can identify him as a âWesterner,â likely a Sogdian from Central Asia.âThe Sogdian people lived in what is now modern-day Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and were active along Silk Road trading routes.The murals coat the entire tomb, save for the floor. The South China Morning Post wrote that the artwork is styled similarly to other Tang-era murals with strong outlines, simple shading, and two-dimensional artwork. Zhen believes the style coincides with the paintings found in the tomb of Wang Shenzi, a key figure in the late 800s during the fall of the Tang dynasty and rise of the Song dynasty. The styles so closely match, it may have been the same painter. Not only was the small, brick tomb covered in paintings, but the gates, corridor, and tomb pedestal holding the coffins were all adorned as well. The domed ceiling strays from the rest of the motif and features a dragon-like image. Figures painted at the gate may represent guardians, with yellow robes and swords tied around their waist. Other scenes include a woman in a brightly colored dress leading four horses while a man stands nearby with a whip, women and men holding boxes or ceremonial bowls tucked to their chests, and an old man shown in various scenes reaching toward a snake, carrying an axe and firewood, and holding a cup. The paintings also feature plenty of trees, flowers, mountains, and livestock. Most of the figures throughout the tomb appear to be the same two people, leading the archaeologists to surmise they were the owners of the tomb.The scenes painted on the mural offered some ânever-before-seenâ examples of Tang-era chores, Xiong told Live Science, and because the figures were most likely the owners of the tomb, probably depicted the minutiae of their daily lives. But the Westernerâs presence adds a bit of mystery to the otherwise staid way of living for the long-deceased man and woman.|
| | Vance brushes off apparent Pope Leo XIV criticism: âI try not to play the politicization of the Pope gameâ - POLITICO
May 10, 2025
Vance brushes off apparent Pope Leo XIV criticism: âI try not to play the politicization of the Pope gameâ
POLITICO
The vice presidentâs comments come after his public dispute with the late Pope Francis. |
| | 55 Things You Need to Know About the New Pope, Leo XIV - POLITICO
May 10, 2025
55 Things You Need to Know About the New Pope, Leo XIV
POLITICO
The first American to preside over the church spent much of his career as a missionary abroad. |
| | Will the first American pope stand up to Trump? â POLITICO
May 10, 2025
Will the first American pope stand up to Trump?
POLITICO
Support in this weekâs papal conclave coalesced around a leader who may challenge the U.S. presidentâs agenda, particularly around migration. |
| | How the word âincelâ got away from us
May 10, 2025
How the word âincelâ got away from us
The Conversation
How a once-neutral term for romantic exclusion became a cultural shorthand for male rage, and what we lose when we ignore the quiet pain it fails to describe. |
| | Trying out llama.cppâs new vision support
May 10, 2025
Trying out llama.cppâs new vision support
Simon Willisonâs Weblog
This llama.cpp server vision support via libmtmd pull requestâvia Hacker Newsâwas merged earlier today. The PR finally adds full support for vision models to the excellent llama.cpp project. Itâs documented ⌠|
| | Fred Bauer on X: "For @NRO this weekend, my dispatch from the debate between @dsallentess and @curtis_yarvin at Harvard. https://t.co/xvfR3wskwW" / X
May 10, 2025 |
| | Harvard Hosts Revealing Clash | National Review
May 10, 2025
A Revealing Clash of Worldviews at Harvard | National Review
National Review
An argument between a member of Harvardâs faculty and a neo-reactionary blogger suggests it would be a grave error to throw out our almost-250-year-old republic. |
| | Hoatzin: The strange 'stinkbird' born with clawed wings that appears to be an evolutionary 'orphan' | Live Science
May 10, 2025
The strange 'stinkbird' born with clawed wings that appears to be an evolutionary 'orphan'
Live Science
This weird blue-faced, red-eyed bird smells so bad predators won't eat it. |
| | Rothmus đ´ on X: "đ https://t.co/p6xCpS1QmY" / X
May 10, 2025 |
| | Bidenâs Pathetic Rehabilitation Tour | National Review
May 10, 2025
Bidenâs Pathetic Rehabilitation Tour | National Review |
| | âIf You Can Survive the Hill, You Can Survive in Prisonâ - POLITICO
May 10, 2025
âIf You Can Survive the Hill, You Can Survive in Prisonâ
POLITICO
What former Rep. George Santos should know as he heads to prison, according to another ex-con ex-congressman. |
| | Pope Leo XIV: How American Robert Prevost won over the conclave
May 10, 2025
Why the conclave elected Robert Prevost, now Pope Leo XIV
Axios
Prevost benefitted from being the "least American" of the U.S. cardinals |
| | Vice President Vance joins Hugh to talk Leo XIV, TDS, and judicial selection - YouTube
May 10, 2025
Vice President Vance joins Hugh to talk Leo XIV, TDS, and judicial selection
YouTube
Join Hugh LIVE: Weekdays, 3-6PM ET.Visit Hugh's website: https://hughhewitt.comFollow Hugh on Twitter: https://twitter.com/hughhewittThe Hugh Hewitt Show on ... |
| | Coffee With Scott Adams 5/10/25 - YouTube
May 10, 2025
Episode 2835 CWSA 05/10/25
YouTube
The Yoda frame: Republicans do while Democrats not do.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~If you would like to enjoy this same content plus bonus conten... |
| | David Hogg tried pitching a compromise to the DNC. He was rebuffed. - POLITICO
May 10, 2025
David Hogg tried pitching a compromise to the DNC. He was rebuffed.
POLITICO
The 25-year-old vice chair's plan to attack "asleep-at-the-wheel" Democrats has rattled the party. |
| | Democrats are going Hogg wild and shutting out incumbents
May 10, 2025
Democrats are going Hogg wild and tanking their own incumbents
The Hill
Newly minted DNC vice chair David Hogg put out a call to arms ⌠against his own party.
Ask Democratic National Committee Vice Chair David Hogg why Democratic lawmakers are heading toward the exits. It is because people like him want to widen the generational and ideological rifts growing within their party. Their goal is to remake the Democratic Party in their own narrow, extremist image â even if it means driving everyone else out and Americans away. Hogg recently put out a call to arms ... against his own party. âLeaders We Deserve is launching a $20 million investment to usher in the next generation of Democrats who will go to the mat every day for the American people and use every tactic and tool to stop Trumpâs radical right-wing, economically illiterate agenda.â Note well the phrase âuse every tactic and tool.â Their plan is to primary Democrats who donât meet the groupâs extremist agenda. Despite a belated repudiation from his boss, the DNC chair, Hoggâs move threatens to drive a pecuniary wedge into an already widening party fissure that might be felt in November 2026. On paper, the 2026 midterms should be favorable for Democrats. They need only to pick up four Senate seats to retake the majority. And hey have nine fewer seats at stake (13 Democrats versus 22 Republicans). Also, historically, the party not holding the White House usually gains seats in midterms. Despite these advantages, Democrats are well on their way to turning lemonade back into lemons. In reality, their position was always weaker than it appeared on paper. Democrats are defending two states (Georgia and Michigan) that Trump won in 2024. Republicans are defending only one, Maine (Trump lost by a 7-point margin), where incumbent Sen. Susan Collins (R) is always predicted to face a close election but always ends up winning by a larger-than-expected margin. In contrast, Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-Ga.) faces his first reelection after squeaking out a close win in his initial race, and in a state Trump won by 2 percentage points last year. The other place where Democrats are on defense is in Michigan for an open seat. Next are seats in states only narrowly won in 2024. Democrats are defending three of these in Virginia (5.7 percentage points), New Jersey (5.9 percentage points), and New Mexico (6.1 percentage points). Yes, Democrats have incumbents defending all three, but a mere swing of 3 points of the vote would have swung each to Trump. These can hardly be taken for granted. Republicans have only one such seat, in North Carolina, which Trump won by 3.3 percentage points. Republican incumbent Sen. Thom Tillis is running for re-election there. The biggest 2026 Senate disparity is in the number of open seats each party must defend. Because incumbents overwhelmingly win their races, contests without incumbents are more of a crapshoot. In 2026, Democrats must defend five open seats: Michigan, Colorado, Illinois, New Hampshire and Minnesota. Trump won Michigan by 1.6 percentage points; he lost Colorado by 11 points, Minnesota by 4 points, New Hampshire by 3 points, and Illinois by 11 points. Republicans have only one open seat to defend: Sen. Mitch McConnellâs in Kentucky, a state Trump won by more than 30 points. To recap, despite their 2026 advantage on paper, Democrats have five open seats, three seats Kamala Harris won only narrowly in 2024 and two seats (Georgia and Michigan) in states Trump won. Thatâs nine states in the âconcern column.â In contrast, Republicans have just three: Kentucky (2026 open), North Carolina (Trump 2024 narrow) and Maine (Trump 2024 loss). Democrats will need to spend disproportionately on their nine âconcern columnâ states. That means less money for their only two plausible pickup targets in Maine and North Carolina. All of this concern is premised only on what Democrats will face from Republicans. When Hoggâs internecine âprimarying proposalâ is added, things get worse still. Primaried Democratic incumbents will be forced to run to the left to win their partyâs nomination against more extreme challengers. Such primary positioning will force them to take positions that will be hard to defend in a general election. Even worse, radical challengers could win some primaries, leaving Democrats with nominees too radical to win a general election. And the elections in the âconcern columnâ states are swing states â not safe, deep-blue bastions â where the general electorate wonât be predisposed to a Democratic extremist. Though less manifest now, the danger is no less in House races. These races are lower profile. For this reason, incumbents considering not seeking reelection donât feel the same pressure to announce early their decision and give potential replacements the longer lead time needed to raise large sums and prepare statewide campaigns. But rest assured, if Senate incumbents are feeling the pressure, House Dems are too. Already, Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is being primaried. Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.) just announced she is retiring in the face of a progressive primary challenge. In fact, such an extremist uprising could be more dangerous to Democrats in the House than in the Senate. House elections are smaller affairs with less media coverage and can more easily turn on a single issue â just the sort of bad position a member could be forced to take in order to survive a primary against an extreme challenger. Hogg and his fellow extremists are in a hurry to drive out their older, less extreme, and more establishment members for a more confrontational cadre of activist members. For Hogg and his extremists, theirs is a no-lose proposition; for Democrats trying to pull the party back from the brink, itâs a no-win proposition. J.T. Young is the author of the recent book, âUnprecedented Assault: How Big Government Unleashed Americaâs Socialist Leftâ from RealClear Publishing and has over three decadesâ experience working in Congress, the Department of Treasury, the Office of Management and Budget, and representing a Fortune 20 company.|
| | Pope Leo XIV: What happened inside the conclave? At lunchtime, the Italian favorite lost ground and Prevost took the lead | International | EL PAĂS English
May 10, 2025
What happened inside the conclave? At lunchtime, the Italian favorite lost ground and Prevost took the lead
EL PAĂS English
The most plausible hypothesis suggests that Pietro Parolin failed to break through his ceiling of support, and the Chicago-born cardinal quickly gained the upper hand
In the conclave that elected Pope Leo XIV on Thursday, the popular Roman saying was relentlessly repeated: âHe who enters as pope leaves as cardinal.â Sometimes this hasnât been the case, as with Pius XII in 1939 or Benedict XVI in 2005, when the clear favorites were selected in very quick conclaves, with three and four votes respectively. This conclave was also swift, with four ballots. But the chosen candidate wasnât the favorite, Pietro Parolin, but rather the dark horse: Robert Francis Prevost. What happens in the conclave is secret, although everything eventually comes to light, but the most plausible hypothesis, supported by all analysts, is that a scenario similar to 2013 occurred, when Pope Francis was elected. At that time, the election of an Italian, Angelo Scola, was seen as certain, but there was a surprise. It turned out he didnât have as much support and it quickly collapsed in favor of an alternative candidate who had been working behind the scenes, the future Argentine pope. It only took five votes, one more than this time. Parolin also entered the conclave in a weakened position. There were rumors about his fragile health, which the Vatican denied; his handling of the case of Cardinal Angelo Becciu was questioned when â at the last minute â he brought out two documents from Francis that ratified the veto against Becciuâs entry, and the conservative sector couldnât forgive him for being responsible for the controversial agreement between the Holy See and China. Itâs likely that the first vote was fatal for Parolin, who had been expected to receive between 40 and 50 votes at the very least in the days leading up to the conclave. If he received fewer, the drop in support would have had the same effect as it did with Scola. And most probably, among the many papabili that were considered as alternatives, it was Prevost who stood out with a solid initial vote count. In reality, he was the strongest candidate, the one with the least objections, and with support from a broad spectrum of the Church, not just the progressive wing. The most plausible scenario is that Prevost received backing from the United States and all of Latin America, as his figure unites the entire continent. That accounts for 36 votes. Additionally, itâs likely that he was supported by many European cardinals, who number 53, as well as parts of the curia, which he is a part of. And in general, he would have been well regarded by many cardinals from the Global South and all those who wanted a pontiff in the same spirit as Pope Francis. The day before the conclave, there was speculation in Rome about an alliance between Parolin and Filipino Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle, in which they would later divide power, with Tagle possibly assuming the position of Secretary of State. In theory, such agreements are prohibited, but itâs no secret that they happen. It is also said in Rome, echoing the popular saying, that many enter the conclave with the ambition of becoming pope but would settle for a Secretary of State position. In any case, if such an operation existed, it failed. Tagle, too, arrived in a weakened position at the conclave: his management of Caritas International had been heavily criticized, giving him the image of a disastrous administrator. What is certain is that by the first and second votes on Thursday, the situation became clear, and by lunchtime, once again, the final vote would be determined by the last and decisive conversations to convince the undecided. The only question is whether Parolin decided to step back, aware that he would not be able to attract more support, in order to transfer his votes to Prevost, or if such a move wasnât necessary. The final twist in the exchange of roles is that it was Parolin, precisely, as the highest authority of the College of Cardinals in the conclave, who had to ask Prevost if he accepted the nomination. And he said yes. Later, Leo XIV had him by his side as he appeared on the St. Peterâs balcony. This time, with Parolin emerging as a frontrunner in the days leading up to the conclave, a trend from 2005 has repeated itself. That year, after the election of the first non-Italian pope in centuries, John Paul II, Italy launched a strong campaign to return to tradition and elect an Italian pope. The Italian press favored several Italian candidates, most notably Dionigi Tettamanzi, but in reality, the favorite was Joseph Ratzinger. In the conclave, according to later reconstructions, the truth is that Tettamanzi had no chance and received only two votes. Meanwhile, Ratzinger faced two competitors, the Jesuits Carlo Maria Martini and Jorge Mario Bergoglio. But they decided to step aside for the good and unity of the Church and not to prolong the conclave with a blocking minority. Something similar may have occurred this time, with Parolin, upon realizing that he wasnât gaining traction, deciding to step back and transfer his votes to his rival. The speed of the conclave, which ended on Thursday, makes it possible that such a situation took place, as no blocking maneuver seems to have happened. In fact, in 2005, those competing with Ratzinger withdrew because they realized that if they blocked him without gaining support themselves, all of them would ultimately be eliminated, and a third, perhaps worse, candidate could emerge. They considered that the German cardinal was, after all, the best pope possible. Versions diverge on whether Bergoglio stepped aside voluntarily or was pushed out, as some historians argue that it was Martini, who did not have a good relationship with the Argentine cardinal, who went around the tables during mealtime to move his votes to the future Benedict XVI. For his part, Francis later recounted that he asked not to be voted for because he suspected he was only being used to block Ratzingerâs path, and that a shadow candidate would emerge afterward. In 2013, the Italian press once again pushed hard for another Italian cardinal, Angelo Scola, the Patriarch of Venice, a disciple of Ratzinger. who was close to the Communion and Liberation movement. The media bombardment was intense, though it was mostly an Italian phenomenon â outside the country, the idea of returning to an Italian pope seemed outdated. Still, the sense of certainty was so strong that after the white smoke, the Italian Bishopsâ Conference mistakenly issued a statement congratulating Scola. During the live broadcast of Italyâs state-run station RAI, when Bergoglio appeared on the balcony, there was a minute of silence â the script had been thrown off. According to later accounts, in the first vote, Scola received only 25 votes, compared to Bergoglioâs 12 â despite reports in the days prior that he had secured at least 50. His candidacy quickly collapsed; it became clear that his support had been overstated and wouldnât grow. From the second round onward, Bergoglio began to gain momentum. Once again, the lunch break proved decisive in cementing his support. In fact, his name had been quietly circulating in the days before, though he was considered a long shot. Sign up for our weekly newsletter to get more English-language news coverage from EL PAĂS USA Edition|
| | gorklon rust on X: "đ¤" / X
May 10, 2025 |
| | MAGA is quiet as Trump, Vance criticize Putin
May 10, 2025
MAGA is quiet as Trump, Vance criticize Putin
Axios
The MAGA base isn't piling on â and remains as skeptical of Ukraine as ever. |
| | How American Cardinal Robert Prevost Beat the Odds to Become Pope Leo XIV - WSJ
May 10, 2025 |
| | Democrats STORM ICE Facility, Rep ATTACKS Feds, Democrat Mayor ARRESTED | Timcast IRL - YouTube
May 10, 2025
Democrats STORM ICE Facility, Rep ATTACKS Feds, Democrat Mayor ARRESTED | Timcast IRL
YouTube
Call 1-800-958-1000 or visit http://www.TNUSA.com/timSUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Sign Up For Exclusive Episodes At https... |
| | Newark, NJ Mayor ARRESTED After Democrats STORM ICE Facility, INSURRECTION! - YouTube
May 10, 2025
Newark, NJ Mayor ARRESTED After Democrats STORM ICE Facility, INSURRECTION!
YouTube
SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW COFFEE NOW - https://castbrew.com/Sign Up For Exclusive Episodes At https://timcast.com/Merch - https://timcast.creator-spring... |
| | The CIA method for making quick decisions under stress - Big Think
May 9, 2025
The CIA method for making quick decisions under stress
Big Think
âThe very same time thatâs making you anxious is actually your most valuable asset. You can always create more energy and more moneyâbut you can never create more time.â |
| | If You Want to Use AI Effectively, You Need to Talk to It
May 9, 2025
If You Want to Use AI Effectively, You Need to Talk to It
How-To Geek
Talking to AI is more like giving instructions to a human than you think. |
| | GOP rallies around embattled Democratic Sen. John Fetterman
May 9, 2025
GOP rallies around embattled Democratic Sen. John Fetterman
Axios
"The media ought to lay off Senator Fetterman," Grassley posted. |
| | Pope Leo makes true feelings for JD Vance clear in scathing four-word tweet - Irish Star
May 9, 2025
Pope Leo makes true feelings for JD Vance clear in scathing four-word tweet
Irish Star
Pope Leo XIV, the first American head of the Catholic Church, has made his feelings regarding the Vice President of the United States very clear in an unearthed tweet |
| | Fed Hesitates on Tariffs, The New Mag 7, Death of VC, Google's Value in a Post-Search World - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Fed Hesitates on Tariffs, The New Mag 7, Death of VC, Google's Value in a Post-Search World
YouTube
(0:00) The Besties intro Philippe Laffont!(2:12) Miami F1 Recap!(12:10) Fed holds rates steady on tariff uncertainty(32:47) Google drops after Apple sees fal... |
| | Hilaria's Absurd New Book, MAHA Drama and Truth About RFK, and Launching "Spot On," with Link Lauren - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Hilaria's Absurd New Book, MAHA Drama and Truth About RFK, and Launching "Spot On," with Link Lauren
YouTube
Megyn Kelly is joined by Link Lauren, host of Spot on with Link Lauren, to discuss the drama in the MAHA movement surrounding President Trumpâs pick for the ... |
| | Victor Davis Hanson: Canada Missed Out on a Huge Opportunity - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Victor Davis Hanson: Canada Missed Out on a Huge Opportunity
YouTube
Canadian nationalism might have won the battle, but Trump will win the war. Earlier this week, newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, a liberal, ... |
| | Negotiations, Military Success, and the Overweening, Underwhelming Left - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Negotiations, Military Success, and the Overweening, Underwhelming Left
YouTube
Our Sponsor: Go to https://hometitlelock.com/victor to get a FREE title history report so you can find out if youâre already a victim AND 14 days of protecti... |
| | DC Dems out to get John Fetterman, crackdown on dissent and other commentary
May 9, 2025
DC Dems out to get John Fetterman, foolish crackdown on dissent and other commentary
New York Post
Sen. John Fettermanâs âmental acuity was just fine to Democrats. But then he stood up for Israel,â observes the Washington Examinerâs Salena Zito. |
| | Lithium deposit valued at $1.5 trillion discovered in the U.S. - Earth.com
May 9, 2025
Volcanic white gold: A lithium deposit valued at $1.5 trillion has been discovered in the U.S.
Earth.com
Lithium deposit valued at US$1.5 trillion discovered; promises to boost batteries, but worries local indigenous communities. |
| | An American satellite detects in China an ultra-secret nuclear technology with potentially devastating capabilities.
May 9, 2025
An American satellite detects in China an ultra-secret nuclear technology with potentially devastating capabilities.
The recent detection of a massive Chinese nuclear fusion facility by US surveillance satellites has sent ripples through the international scientific and defense communities. This groundbreaking discovery reveals China's ambitious push toward mastering fusion technology, potentially revolutionizing global energy production while raising serious concerns about its military applications and international⌠|
| | President Trump Signs Executive Orders, May 9, 2025 - YouTube
May 9, 2025
President Trump Signs Executive Orders, May 9, 2025
YouTube
The White House |
| | Linguists Find Proof of Sweeping Language Pattern Once Deemed a âHoaxâ | Scientific American
May 9, 2025
Linguists Find Proof of Sweeping Language Pattern Once Deemed a âHoaxâ
Scientific American
Inuit languages really do have many words for snow, linguists foundâand other languages have conceptual specialties, too, potentially revealing what a culture values |
| | Wayne Yap on X: "The woman's skirt rule for prompting: Make it long enough to cover the important bits, but not so long you trip over it." / X
May 9, 2025 |
| | NEW Pope SLAMMED As WOKE, Robert Prevost Named Pope Leo XIV, Anti-Trump Posts Go Viral | Timcast IRL - YouTube
May 9, 2025
NEW Pope SLAMMED As WOKE, Robert Prevost Named Pope Leo XIV, Anti-Trump Posts Go Viral | Timcast IRL
YouTube
Get the sleep you deserve with up to 40% off Dream. Just click https://shopbeam.com/TimPool and use code TIMPOOL at checkout.SUPPORT THE SHOW BUY CAST BREW C... |
| | Being A Celebrity Is Just A Crowd Reaction - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Being A Celebrity Is Just A Crowd Reaction
YouTube
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| | WATCH: Press Sec highlights the Trump Admin's efforts to modernize the air traffic control system - YouTube
May 9, 2025
WATCH: Press Sec highlights the Trump Admin's efforts to modernize the air traffic control system
YouTube
WATCH: Press Sec highlights the Trump Admin's efforts to modernize the air traffic control system |
| | We FINALLY Have Rocket Racoon's Origin Story - YouTube
May 9, 2025
We FINALLY Have Rocket Racoon's Origin Story
YouTube
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| | Ouverture suite for alto recorder in A Minor, TWV 55:a2: I. Ouverture - YouTube Music
May 9, 2025
Ouverture suite for alto recorder in A Minor, TWV 55:a2: I. Ouverture - YouTube Music
YouTube Music
Provided to YouTube by Naxos Digital Services Ouverture suite for alto recorder in A Minor, TWV 55:a2: I. Ouverture ¡ Christoph Wald ¡ Camerata Vivaldi ¡ Ge... |
| | Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Briefs Members of the Media, May 09, 2025 - YouTube
May 9, 2025
Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt Briefs Members of the Media, May 09, 2025
YouTube
The White House |
| | Fetterman doubts explode into Capitol Hill firestorm
May 9, 2025
Fetterman doubts explode into Capitol Hill firestorm
Axios
Fetterman's senior staff has built a bubble around him internally, shielding the senator from interactions with junior staffers. |